Against a backdrop of escalating climate risks and mounting pressure on food production, wheat (one of the world’s most widely grown crops) is emerging as the focal point of a new generation of scientific and collaborative solutions. Backed by the Gates Foundation and the United Kingdom’s Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO), an international alliance anchored at CIMMYT is working to accelerate innovation in this strategic crop and strengthen the resilience of agri-food systems worldwide.
Over three days, experts, policymakers, and representatives from the global agricultural sector convened at CIMMYT headquarters for the launch of HyBread and the Global Wheat Health Alliance, an initiative aimed at redefining wheat’s role in food systems increasingly exposed to extreme conditions.
The diagnosis is widely shared: in key regions such as South Asia and East Africa, farmers face rising temperatures, erratic rainfall, and the spread of diseases that threaten harvest stability. In this context, incremental innovation is no longer enough.
A New Approach to Wheat Improvement
HyBread proposes a fundamental shift in strategy. The project combines the development of improved wheat varieties with the promotion of hybrids, a technology widely used in other crops but only now gaining traction in wheat. This approach integrates sustained genetic gains with the potential of heterosis, which can translate into higher yields and improved performance under adverse conditions.
The expected benefits go beyond productivity. Hybrids may also offer greater heat tolerance, better performance under water stress, and stronger resistance to diseases such as rust, Fusarium, and wheat blast, the leading threats to global wheat production.
A Systemic Model for Resilience
The scope of the initiative extends well beyond plant breeding. HyBread is designed as an integrated model connecting three key dimensions: accelerated development of pure lines through data-driven tools, the generation of high-yielding hybrids, and the expansion of a global portfolio of resistance genes through the Global Wheat Health Alliance.
This approach reflects a growing recognition that agricultural resilience does not rest on a single solution, but on the alignment of science, production systems, and collaborative networks.
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